Michele Seven Decides to Resist Her Taxes

Michele Seven didn’t file her tax return in 2007,
not for ideological reasons, but due to some turbulence and disorder in her
life. The
IRS
caught up to her and sent her a letter claiming that she owed $640,000 and
that they were looking to seize that much from her.

Well, that’s about ten times what she earned in
2006. The
IRS got
its figures by adding up all of her gains but not bothering to try to estimate
her costs and losses.

She called up to find out what to do about it, and the
IRS
said, “just file your return.” But the more she thought about it, the less she
wanted to file. She felt that by filing she’d be conceding a debt that she
considered illegitimate, that it would be like certifying her own slavery.

I believe it’s my duty to resist laws that are unjust…

I know this is probably going to upset some, but I believe that
Iraqis have a right to life, and liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness as well. And the fact is that hundreds of thousands of innocent
Iraqi people have been killed — paid for by United States tax dollars.

I am a Christian and I do believe that one day I’m going to stand before
God. And when I do, I really don’t want to say, “Well, God, I was so afraid
to go to prison that I was willing to have babies aborted, people murdered…”

He figures, for one thing, it would be something that we desire for its own
sake (not as a means to some other end). This seems to satisfy the criteria
I mentioned back in my introduction
to this review, when I said I was most interested in an ethics that
begins from a starting point of assuming that values are things judged by
human standards (not by God or by reference to some myth or something
overly-metaphysical). Here Aristotle defines the “ultimate end” in terms of
what people desire.

Aristotle dismisses (a little too quickly, I think) the possibility that
there is no such “ultimate end” — that the means-subends-superends structure
is something more complex than a simple nested hierarchy. What if ends become
means to other ends that are means to ends that wrap around on each other
like snakes eating their tails? It wouldn’t surprise me to find that it’s
something really messy like this. But, again, Aristotle isn’t having it. He
says that if there is no ultimate end, this would mean “our desire would be
empty and vain” (as though this were a reductio ad absurdum) — but perhaps, as the preacher says, our aspirations indeed are empty and vain!

So I guess we have to add a caveat to the rest of this book: that it’s valid
unless life is meaningless and all our hopes are in vain, in which case it’s
void.

But, granting that caveat, if there is an ultimate end to which we should
aspire, what is it? Aristotle nominates, to my surprise, politics.
Politics? This is because it’s the science of governing all of the other
arts and activities of man, deciding what resources to allocate in what ways,
educating citizens in various sciences and wisdoms, legislating which means
are to be encouraged and which to be banned, and so forth. It’s sort of the
superscience that regulates and directs all the other ones.

While it’s easy for me to see politics as a very complex example of
an end (and a means to many others), to see it as the (or even an)
ultimate end is too much for my imagination. I’m curious to see how
Aristotle justifies his choice.

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